Five Peace Band Live

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ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK // LIVE

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 139:00

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Good for both

Chana

It´s a very good album, good for both lovers, fusion and jazz- The first set it´s an amazing fusion group full of a Miles sounds and a great rithm section. The second set is beter for the jazz lovers. Tooken a long time to remember Monk, Peterson and Coltrane. Lisen Some day my Price will come and enjoy.

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As good as ever!

EMUSIC-004D09E4

This live setis taken from the critically-acclaimed Fall 2008 European tour of the "super-group" that was named by John McLaughlin.Two iconic fusion artists - Chick Corea and McLaughlin come together to provide us with an amazing perfomance supported ably by saxophonist Kenny Garrett and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta .

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What a deal

SalemSpade

Get this before they realize they are giving away 2 cd's of amazing fusion for only 8 credits. This set is amazing!!

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Not Quite

longislandhasher1

I like much of what Chick and John do and have seen them mesmerize a number of times, but this record just doesn't have the magic for me as many others do. I was licking my chops to hear this - but it didn't blow me away.

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Great!

fortyfives

Saw these guys live a few months back. Great stuff!

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AN EPIC ADVENTURE!!

FUSIONFRED

I've had this release spinning around my head for the last couple of days.... ...and each time I listen...something else catches my ear....some very excellent soloing, of course...and the ensemble really seems to gel.. ...if you're a fan of Chick, like I am, you won't be disappointed at all!!

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Fusion As It Should Be

BanzaiBill

This is a wonderful LIVE recording. The music is well crafted and played, and it, ironically, takes me back to a time when Fusion was "the thing" in the jazz world. What an ensemble of personnel--Chick Corea, John McLaughlin, Kenny Garrett, Christian McBride, and Vinnie Colaiuta, with Herbie Hancock making a guest appearance as well. If you like Fusion Jazz, you will LOVE this album. Banzai Bill White The Jazz Set www.live365.com/stat- ions/- - banzaibill_wwoz

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THIS IS A GEM!

RickZee

The personnel is, of course, off the charts...and the playing is spirited! As an example of electric fusion, this MUST find a place in your library. Um...BUT IT...NOW! And, enjoy!!!!

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April.15.09

brighternow

Five Peace Band is: - Chick Corea, keyboards.....John McLaughlin, guitar.....Christian McBride, bass.....Kenny Garrett, alto sax.....Vinnie Colaiuta, drums.....fivepeaceband.com

They Say All Media Guide

Chick Corea and John McLaughlin share one of the great pedigrees in the music of the 20th century: they were both key sidemen on Miles Davis’ seminal albums In a Silent Way and Bitches Brew. They have played together since those heady days, as a duo or as sit-in guests. Five Peace Band was Corea’s idea of putting together a dream band to play all kinds of jazz, and he approached McLaughlin. Corea chose the other members in saxophonist Kenny Garrett, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, and bassist Christian McBride. The group toured for nearly a year following Corea’s Return to Forever reunion tour, and this double CD was compiled from that jaunt. It’s true that on paper supergroups are suspicious offerings. Not so here. This band includes three younger — yet veteran — musicians who team wonderfully with the two legends on this set. Of the eight pieces included here, five are originals — three by McLaughlin and a pair by Corea — along with Davis’ “In a Silent Way/It’s About That Time” (with Herbie Hancock guesting), Jackie McLean’s “Dr. Jackle,” and a reading of the standard “Someday My Prince Will Come” (a duet between pianist and guitarist that elegantly closes disc two). McLaughlin’s compositions are fairly recent; they were recorded with his 4th Dimension group on his excellent Floating Point and Industrial Zen albums. As one can imagine, this material is played here the way it was there — only more so — as extremely engaging 21st century electric fusion. His other piece, “Señor C.S.,” is reimagined from the studio version on Industrial Zen. Here it is played harder and faster yet gives away none of its Latin groove, and instead comes off as a new, much more technically ambitious mutation of samba.
It should be noted that the rhythm section here is nothing less than startling. McBride is equally at home on an electric bass, and his sense of fire, funkiness, and dynamic range is in every note. Colaiuta is simply one of the most talented and exciting drummers out there, and creates an art form of dressing his timekeeping in impeccable and imaginative ways. Corea’s tunes are closer to something resembling mainstream jazz — though the gorgeous and lengthy (it clocks in at over 27 minutes) “Hymn to Andromeda” moves gradually and beautifully to the outside, with beautiful playing by Garrett and McLaughlin, who can still handle non-fusion material with invention, restraint, and taste. Disc two begins with an odd, idiosyncratic reading of McLean’s “Dr. Jackle” as an attempt to stretch hard bop toward something (via Corea’s arrangement) — but what it is, isn’t quite clear. The version of “In a Silent Way/It’s About That Time” with Hancock is the album’s high point. He plays an electric piano and creates the necessary incantatory vibe in the ethereal, soft, speculative beginning for Corea to simply caress into being. McLaughlin just floats about as an accompanist to the keys, and when he does play single lines, they become hesitant, soft, direction-pointing exercises toward what is to come. When the tune splits and becomes more aggressive in the latter half, the band gels and he finds himself in the maelstrom as the two keyboardists vie for dominance and the rhythm section creates a sense of pulse and excitement. His solo is brief and to the point yet full of knots and turns — his trading lines with Garrett is especially tantalizing. Five Peace Band re-creates an extremely ambitious and beautifully executed gig, where all players were firing on all cylinders. – Thom Jurek

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